Saturday 16 August 2008

Showcase Live is coming alive

Since Gillette Stadium open in 2002, everything about the land site off Route 1 in Foxboro has gone big, from the stadium itself to the Patriot Place retail and entertainment building complex that opened last fall.


But the new Showcase Live music locus is taking a Wes Welker-like turn off route toward intimacy.


The state of the art supper order in the shadow of the Big Razor - and the new centerpiece of Patriot Place - gets christened tomorrow night when jazz singer Al Jarreau hits the stage.




Though Showcase Live is billed as an upscale, 16,000-square-foot venture designed to bring elder, established touring acts to the suburbs, its closeness will be its shortest path to success. It features a design that resembles a balcony-less Paradise Rock Club, albeit one with a glitzy Las Vegas makeover, including bon vivant food from former Foxwoods Casino administrator chef Steve Morrissette to augment the live show experience.


The orthogonal room boasts a 28-foot-long stage and 52-foot bar. The farthest any concertgoer will stand from the stage is a mere 35 feet - consanguineous to roughly the 25th row at any major local concert venue.


�That�s the best tail end in the house in many other venues,� said Scott Bernstein, vice president of marketing for the venue�s parent troupe, National Amusements. �There�s just no room outside of Las Vegas this intimate in nature.�


Showcase Live accommodates 508 spectators when filled with


tables, a fitting atmosphere for upcoming performers Chaka Khan (Monday), Boyz II Men (Wednesday) comedian Dave Attell (Aug. 23) and Savion Glover (Aug. 29). Seating will be on a first-come, first-served basis, though the four and six-person booths on the sidelines can be reserved.


When somewhat rowdier shows take berth, such as Greg Gillis� spastic sample-slicing laptop dancing party Girl Talk (Nov. 14) and the Pietasters� and Toasters� Skanksgiving concert (Nov. 15), the tables will be cleared to open the floor for 1,000 people.


Booking is being handled by Blue Note Entertainment, which too slots Cambridge�s Regattabar, so don�t expect a slue of punk and hard-rock shows moving forward.


When not hosting bouncy shows, the venue will be used for private parties, VIP receptions and sporting event screenings, made possible by three wall-sized digital projection screens in arrears the stage and 6 LED high-definition screens around the interior.


Go to showcaselive.com for the complete schedule.


Dance to Hotline


Tune in to WFNX-FM on Sunday from 10 p.m. to midnight as Hotline�s Michael Marotta joins FNX�s Paul Driscoll on �New England Product,� an minute of Boston�s best local music, and then �First Contact,� 60 minutes of ace new tunes from around the globe. Listen locally at 101.7 FM or online at fnxradio.com.


We�ve got concerts


Tickets to the undermentioned concerts go on sale today at 10 a.m. through Ticketmaster (617-931-2000, ticketmaster.com) and Live Nation (livenation.com):





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Thursday 7 August 2008

Broadcast Tv Passes Newspapers In Ad Sales

Broadcast idiot box is expected to receive more ad dollars than newspapers this year, according to a study by the fairness investment firm Veronis Suhler Stevenson. If it does, VSS discovered, it would be the first clock time in U.S. history that newspapers will have been displaced by television. As reported by Reuters, the study predicted that circularise TV will earn around $51 million versus $46.8 million for newspapers. (It was not clear whether the study took into accounting recent reports indicating that the nation's flagging auto companies will likely abridge their spending on advertisement by $3-8 billion by the end of the year.) Both media are likely to fall behind the Internet within two years, the study predicted, with the Internet taking in $59.8 billion in 2009; broadcast TV, 51.2 billion; and newspapers, $43.7 billion.

05/08/2008





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